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Dirk Willems etching from Martyrs Mirror "Death of Cranmer", from the 1887 Foxe's Book of Martyrs. Jan van Essen and Hendrik Vos, 1523, burned at the stake, early Lutheran martyrs; Jan de Bakker, 1525, burned at the stake; Martyrs of Tlaxcala, 1527-1529; Felix Manz, 1527; Patrick Hamilton, 1528, burned at the stake, early Lutheran martyr ...
2019 Buzád Hahót: 1241: Caius of Korea: 1624: 1867 Candelaria of San José: 1940: 2008 Carlo Acutis: 2006: 2020 Carlos Manuel Rodriguez: 1963: 2001 Cassien de Nantes: 1638: 1905 Caterina Dominici: 1894: 1978 Catherine of St. Augustine: 1668: 1989 Catherine Jarrige: 1836: 1996 Cecilia Butsi: 1940: 1989 Ceferino Namuncurá: 1905: 2007 Ceferino ...
List of Unitarian martyrs: a list of people considered martyrs for their adherence to the Unitarianism movement. Martyrs of Gorkum: 19 Dutch Catholic clerics and friars hanged by militant Dutch Calvinists during the 16th century religious wars. Martyrs of Nowogródek: 11 Sisters of the Holy Family of Nazareth executed by the Gestapo in 1943 in ...
December 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this message) ( Learn how and when to remove this message ) This article is a list of people proposed by each diocese of the Catholic Church for beatification and canonization , whose causes have been officially opened during the papacy of Pope Francis and are newly given the title as Servants of God .
7.2 23 March 2019, Tarragona, Spain. ... This page was last edited on 20 February 2025, ... List of people beatified by Pope Francis.
This article contains a list of the 942 saints canonized by Pope Francis (2013–) during his pontificate, which includes the 813 Martyrs of Otranto as a group, 23 who were equipollently canonized and 4 who were canonized in other countries.
Nun and martyr Blessed Carlo Acutis: 1991 London, United Kingdom: 2006 Monza, Italy: October 10, 2020 April 27, 2025 Layman 21 Coptic Martyrs of Libya: Various One from Ghana, others from Egypt: 2015 Sirte, Libya: February 15, 2015 February 21, 2015 Laymen and martyrs [2]
In 1734, spurred on by the English Benedictines of Paris, Archbishop Charles-Gaspard-Guillaume de Vintimille du Luc of Paris opened the Cause for the deposed and exiled James VII and II, who had died in France in 1701 after the Revolution of 1688; a 2019 article in the Catholic Herald provoked renewed interest in the possibility of the king's ...